Happily Ever After | |
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Directed by | John Howley |
Written by |
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Produced by | Lou Scheimer |
Starring | |
Edited by |
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Music by | Frank Becker |
Production company | |
Distributed by | First National Film Corp. |
Release dates |
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Running time | 74 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $6.8 million [1] |
Box office | $3.3 million [2] |
Happily Ever After (originally released as Snow White: The Adventure Continues in the Philippines) [3] [Note 1] is a 1989 animated musical fantasy film directed by John Howley, and starring the voices of Dom DeLuise, Malcolm McDowell, Phyllis Diller, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Ed Asner, Sally Kellerman, Irene Cara, Carol Channing and Tracey Ullman. [4] The film serves as a direct sequel to the Snow White fairy tale, wherein the titular heroine and the Prince are about to be married, but a new threat appears in the form of the late Evil Queen's vengeful brother, Lord Maliss. The plot replaces the Dwarfs with female cousins called the Dwarfelles, who aid Snow White against Maliss.
Happily Ever After is unrelated to Filmation's fellow A Snow White Christmas , a 1980 TV special in which continuity is deliberately and consequently ignored. Following extensive legal troubles with The Walt Disney Company, it had a poor financial and critical reception following its wide release in 1993. A video game adaptation was released in 1994.
The film begins with the kingdom now at peace as Princess Snow White and her beloved the Prince prepare to get married following their victory over Snow White's witch stepmother, the Evil Queen. Back at the Queen's castle, her animal minions rejoice as they celebrate her recent death and their newfound freedom by throwing a party for themselves when the Queen's brother and evil sorcerer, Lord Maliss, arrives there looking for his sister. Learning about the Queen's demise from the Looking Glass, he falls into rage and vows to avenge her by any means. Mallis transforms into a dragon and takes control of the castle, turning the area surrounding both the castle and the kingdom into a perilous wasteland. Afterwards, Scowl the owl starts training his bat friend, Batso, in the ways of evil.
The next day, Snow White and the Prince are in the meadow picking flowers for their wedding, when Maliss, in his dragon form, begins attacking Snow White and the Prince as they are traveling to the cottage of the Seven Dwarfs. Maliss subdues the Prince and captures him, while Snow White manages to flee into the woods and reaches the cottage of the Seven Dwarfs where she meets the Dwarfs' female cousins, the Seven "Dwarfelles": Muddy, Sunburn, Blossom, Marina, Critterina, Moonbeam, and Thunderella. Snow White also learns that the Dwarfs have left the cottage after they bought another mine in a different kingdom, but the Dwarfelles gladly assist in taking her to visit Mother Nature at Rainbow Falls.
Upon arriving at Rainbow Falls, Mother Nature holds Thunderella accountable for not being able to master her powers correctly, accuses the other Dwarfelles of improperly using their powers, and threatens to take them away as punishment if they don't learn. Maliss arrives unexpectedly and attacks them, but Mother Nature shoots him with lightning, causing him to crash and return to his human form. Before leaving, Maliss informs Snow White that the Prince is being held captive in his castle. Snow White and the Dwarfelles travel to Maliss' castle in the Realm of Doom, encountering a strange cloaked humanoid known as the Shadow Man, along the way. Maliss sends his one-horned wolves after the group and they manage to escape with the help of the Shadow Man.
Maliss is furious at this failure and transforms into his dragon form, finally succeeding in capturing Snow White and taking her to his castle. The Dwarfelles follow them and sneak into the castle, while fending off Maliss' minions, including Scowl and Batso. At the same time, Snow White is reunited with the Prince, who begins acting strangely and takes her through a secret passage to supposedly escape. Snow White not only realizes that he is not the real Prince, but he is actually Lord Maliss in disguise. Maliss attempts to throw a magical cloak on Snow White to petrify her into stone, but is attacked by the Shadow Man, whom he overpowers and seemingly kills.
As he tries again to petrify Snow White, the seven Dwarfelles arrive and attack him. They temporarily force him away from Snow White, but are petrified by Maliss. The only one unharmed is Thunderella, who finally gains control of her powers and frees Snow White. Snow White takes advantage of a distraction by Thunderella to defeat Maliss by throwing the petrifying cloak on top of him. He is then permanently petrified in mid-transition between his human and dragon forms. As the sun shines onto the castle, the Dwarfelles are restored back to normal while Snow White tearfully mourns the Shadow Man, believing that she has lost both him and the prince. Suddenly, the Shadow Man transforms into the Prince and awakens. He reveals that Maliss had cast a spell on him and he has been watching over Snow White during her journey.
Mother Nature decides to let the Dwarfelles keep their powers, having finally proven themselves by working together as one, and she allows them to attend Snow White's wedding. In the end, Mother Nature takes in the reformed Batso and Scowl to be trained as her new apprentices. In the process, Scowl has stopped smoking thanks to Sunburn and is able to breathe again. He then comments to Batso that working for Mother Nature would not be so bad. With Snow White and the Prince reunited with each other, the film ends as the two of them share a kiss and begin to live happily ever after.
All lyrics are written by Stephanie Tyrell
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Performer(s) | Length |
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1. | "The Baddest" | Ashley Hall | Ed Asner | |
2. | "Thunderella's Song" | Richard Kerr | Tracey Ullman | |
3. | "Mother Nature's Song" | Barry Mann | Phyllis Diller | |
4. | "Love Is the Reason" | John Lewis Parker | Irene Cara |
The film's production commenced in 1986 [5] and was done 60% overseas. [6] The American animation company Filmation had previously developed a plan to create a series of direct-to-video sequels to popular Disney motion pictures, but only Pinocchio and the Emperor of the Night and Happily Ever After were ever completed. The film's working titles included The Further Adventures of Snow White, Snow White: The Adventure Continues and Snow White in the Land of Doom. [7] [8] Some of its early merchandise did use the title Snow White in the Land of Doom.
However, Walt Disney Productions' chairman Jeffrey Katzenberg and spokesman Tom Deegan regarded the projects as "blatant rip-offs" of their properties. [9] [10] This led to a lawsuit by The Walt Disney Company in 1987 following the release of Emperor of the Night. [9] [11] Filmation thus promised their characters would not resemble those of the Disney incarnation, [12] and changed the title to Snow White and the Seven Dwarfelles [7] and eventually Happily Ever After. [13] They also replaced the Seven Dwarfs with female counterparts, the Dwarfelles. [13]
According to the film's producer Lou Scheimer, black actress Irene Cara's casting as Snow White was regarded by many (including Cara herself) at the time as strangely "colorblind". [7] Mother Nature's original actress was Joni Mitchell. [14] Scheimer also noted his version of Snow White as the story's actual heroine as it is she who rescues the prince in an inversion of the traditional version. [9] The character of Maliss was based on the actor Basil Rathbone. [15]
Reportedly completed by 1988, [16] the film premiered in the Philippines on June 30, 1989 as Snow White: The Adventure Continues. [3] It was also released on November 10, 1989 in Italy as Snow White: And They Lived Happily Ever After and on June 20, 1990 in France as Snow White and the Haunted Castle. Theatrical exhibition in the United States was intended sometime around late 1988 or early 1989; however, because Filmation shut down in 1989, [17] it didn't see a release in the US until May 28, 1993, [18] the same summer that Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs received a re-release. [19] The four-day Memorial Day weekend taking was $1.76 million, [20] $2.8 million after ten days and $3.2 million by the next month. [14] The release was preceded by a $10 million advertising campaign and a substantial merchandising effort from North American distributor First National Film Corp. [9] First National's bankruptcy followed just weeks after the film's failed premiere; [14] its President, Milton Verret, was found guilty of defrauding investors. [21] [22]
Happily Ever After was issued on VHS and LaserDisc by Worldvision and later on DVD (in an edit censoring some violence) by 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment. In 2007, BCI Eclipse released a storybook-themed DVD set with Happily Ever After, Journey Back to Oz , and another "Snow White" sequel film, A Snow White Christmas . This release contains the unedited version of the film, but due to it being taken from a PAL master copy, the film's speed and sound pitch are raised by 4%.
As of 2016, the rights to the film are owned by Universal Pictures through DreamWorks Animation under their ownership of DreamWorks Classics, which holds much of the Filmation catalog. [23]
Despite a substantial advertising campaign and having been expected to become "one of the biggest hits of the year," Happily Ever After performed poorly in the box office during its theatrical run. [12] Its domestic gross was only $3,299,382. [2]
It received generally negative reviews. According to Stephen Holden of The New York Times , "visually, Happily Ever After is mundane. The animation is jumpy, the settings flat, the colors pretty but less than enchanting. The movie's strongest element is its storytelling, which is not only imaginative but also clear and smoothly paced." [24] Kevin Thomas of Los Angeles Times opined the characters (especially the Prince) were "bland" and called the film's songs "instantly forgettable." [25] Rita Kemple of The Washington Post derided the "inane" humor attempts as well as "badly drawn characters" and their "clumsy" animation. [26] Desert News ' Chris Hicks similarly wrote: "Sadly, the animation here is weak, the gags even weaker and the story completely uninvolving." [27] Steve Daly of Entertainment Weekly gave the film a score of F and recommended to "give this Snow White the big kiss-off." [28] Chicago Tribune's Mark Caro wrote that the comparison with Disney's classic Snow White "couldn't be more brutal." [29] The film currently has a 40% approval rating based on 10 reviews on Rotten Tomatoes, with an average rating of 5.9/10. [30] Jerry Beck's The Animated Movie Guide gave it zero stars, citing a "rushed", look, convoluted plot, "mundane" action, mediocre animation, and "wasted" star voice cast, contrasting it with the "wit, charm, and heart" of the Disney film. [31]
Other reviews were more positive. Jeff Shannon of Seattle Times opined that "this one's a cut above in the animation contest, deserving attention in the once-exclusive realm of Disney and Don Bluth. It almost, but not quite, escapes those nagging comparisons." [32] Ralph Novak of People wrote that although "the animation is less sophisticated than the Disney standard," the story "moves nicely, though," with a "colorful" cast of voices. [33] Candice Russell of Sun-Sentinel called it "a sweet and likable film," crediting a screenplay "that avoids cuteness and sentimentality and remembers that kiddie fare is fun" and "a few charming songs adding to the merriment." [34]
An unreleased Nintendo Entertainment System video game was planned in 1991. [35] [36] A Sega game was also considered in 1993. [9] An eventual Super Nintendo Entertainment System version was developed by ASC Games and released by Imagitec Design four years later (and one year after the film's release) in 1994.
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